Who We Are and What We Do

Who We Are

Birch Family Services is a team of more than 3,000 teachers, therapists, social workers, psychologists, nurses,
residence counselors, administrators, board members, and family members working together:

To provide the finest education, habilitation, and residential services to people with autism and other developmental disabilities

To help their families overcome the lifelong obstacles they face in raising children with disabilities.

We’ve grown from a few classrooms into a large network of schools, residences, and family support programs located throughout New York City.
Committed to sharing our expertise widely for the benefit of those we serve, we train hundreds of professionals throughout the tri-state area in our Birch Training Institute.

We speak many languages and reflect the social, racial, and ethnic diversity of New York City.

Poverty: 75% of the children we serve live in families with incomes so low that they qualify for federal meal subsidies.

“The way the teachers and therapists give you the tools you need to care for your child…
it’s like the parent becomes part of the team.”

What We Are Proud Of

We’ve helped 15,000 families since 1975

We’ve been on the cutting edge of services in so many areas

Our programs & services are sought after by families and highly respected by our peers and regulators

“First and foremost, my child needs to be safe and needs to be loved. That’s what he gets at Birch.”

“Birch’s staff really knows how to reach children with special needs- and the progress that Sam is making under their guidance is tremendous.”

“Could my son ever become a well-rounded, confident person? Quinn is becoming that person right before our eyes.”

“All of our children are great learners- we just have to figure out how to deliver the lesson!”

“No words can describe the look on a child’s face when he does something he once thought was impossible.”

“I would cry if Birch weren’t there— it’s been so important to our family to have David happy and making continual progress.
His teachers are second mothers to him and we feel blessed to have found Birch.”

But, There’s So Much More To Do

As we celebrate our significant accomplishments over 35 years, we are mindful of many critical needs yet to be addressed
for the rapidly growing number of young adults with autism and related disabilities whose families turn to us for help.

A New Frontier: “Over 21 and on the Autism Spectrum”

In the past several years, the identification of children with autism has grown dramatically.
Now, roughly one in 100 children is diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder.
Although the system of services for these children is far from perfect, there are strong imperatives in place to help ensure the treatment
and education of infants and children with special needs, from birth until 21.
Local school districts have turned to Birch to help meet the increased demand for services for these children—
and we have provided thousands of preschool, elementary, and high school students with cutting edge education services over the years.

But, all of these children are growing up…

For nearly 21 years, their schools provided daily out-of-home learning and social experiences for children with special needs that
have been crucial to the progress they have made.
However, for many young adults with autism and related disorders over the age of 21,
there are far fewer programs and services available to help them. Now, all too often, they are:

Isolated from friends

Unemployed

Not undergoing training

Living with their parents

Birch Family Services is committed to helping these families…

In the spirit of our long history of providing innovative solutions to difficult problems for people with disabilities,
Birch is ready to help families and government create a comprehensive, effective, and affordable system of care for those more capable
individuals with autism who will still need a lifetime of training, support, guidance,
and protection beyond what their families alone can provide.

This problem is multi-faceted— and so are the solutions…

We are in the initial stages of tackling this problem— and we are starting by speaking with parents, young adults with autism,
other professionals, and government agencies about where the gaps are, which programs and services may help, and how to fund them.
At this point, the greatest needs are:

Develop and maintain successful social relationships

Get and keep a job

Live as independently as possible

Improve the family’s access to information about existing resources

We have outlined and begun to develop a comprehensive network of programs and services to meet these needs.
To build this new network of programs and services, support from a variety of sources will be needed:
public funding, participant fees, foundation grants, and private donations.
Learn about Birch’s New Frontier Program »

“It feels as if all of the resources & opportunities he had as a child have disappeared and that we have to start from scratch
all over again.”